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Klinsmann opts for youth on World Cup roster

Published on NewsOK
Modified: May 24, 2014 at 12:26 am •
Published: May 24, 2014

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STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Julian Green first met most of his U.S. soccer teammates just a few months ago at a training session in Europe shortly before the German-American committed to playing for the United States.

United States soccer coach Jurgen Klinsmann speaks at a news conference for the World Cup soccer tournament in Stanford, Calif., Friday, May 23, 2014. (AP Photo/Jeff Chiu)

DeAndre Yedlin's two brief appearances for the national team came after the U.S. had already qualified for the upcoming tournament in Brazil.

John Brooks made his debut with the national team last summer and has just three exhibition appearances in his career.

Yet those three untested youngsters who have never played a World Cup qualifier much less on the bigger stage of the main tournament were picked for the 23-man roster ahead of more proven players like Landon Donovan, Maurice Edu and Clarence Goodson.

"They are up to the task," coach Jurgen Klinsmann said Friday. "Obviously, emotionally it's a lot to handle, but we have to run them through that process. They are ready for it."

They might need to be if the United States is to make it through a difficult group that features world powers Germany and Portugal and American nemesis Ghana.

The roster includes just five players who have played in a World Cup — Clint Dempsey, Michael Bradley, Tim Howard, Jozy Altidore and DaMarcus Beasley — and seven players 24 or younger.

Green, who turns 19 next month, is by far the most untested of the group despite being a heralded prospect on Bayern Munich's reserve team who was courted by both Germany and the United States for an international commitment.

He has just six minutes of first-team experience with Bayern Munich. He practiced two days with the U.S. team in Germany ahead of an exhibition in Cyprus on March 5 and committed to the Americans later that month.

"I'm very happy," Green said. "It was the right decision. I love playing here. I'm very happy."

He made his U.S. debut as a substitute in the 59th minute of an exhibition against Mexico on April 2. He got an invitation to this camp and eventually made the team ahead of Donovan, the U.S. record-holder with 57 international goals.

Klinsmann said he sees constant improvement every day from Green and that he has proven himself worthy of a spot for Brazil with his play at midfield that has impressed coaches and teammates during the training camp.

"In a soccer team, it is very simple," Klinsmann said. "They measure themselves with the quality you bring to the table, not with the age and not where you are coming from. They want to see that in the games. We played over the last 10 days a lot, a lot of small-side games, very competitive games and games that you can't hide. Julian didn't hide, not even one second."